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Posted On: 11/24/2018 11:33:39 PM
Post# of 65629
Why did you leave the following out of your post?
Context and intellectual honesty, also not the strong suits of Trumpanzees.
They're real enough, what is ascribed to them is conspiracy theory nonsense.
How do you like the company you're in?
Context and intellectual honesty, also not the strong suits of Trumpanzees.
Quote:
In a 1994 report Right Woos Left, published by the Political Research Associates, investigative journalist Chip Berlet argued that right-wing populist conspiracy theories about the Bilderberg group date back as early as 1964 and can be found in Phyllis Schlafly's self-published book A Choice, Not an Echo,[37] which promoted a conspiracy theory in which the Republican Party was secretly controlled by elitist intellectuals dominated by members of the Bilderberg group, whose internationalist policies would pave the way for world communism.[38]
In August 2010, former Cuban president Fidel Castro wrote a controversial article for the Cuban Communist Party newspaper Granma in which he cited Daniel Estulin's 2006 book The Secrets of the Bilderberg Club,[39] which, as quoted by Castro, describes "sinister cliques and the Bilderberg lobbyists" manipulating the public "to install a world government that knows no borders and is not accountable to anyone but its own self."[34]
Proponents of Bilderberg conspiracy theories in the United States include individuals and groups such as the John Birch Society ,[35][40] political activist Phyllis Schlafly,[40] writer Jim Tucker,[41] political activist Lyndon LaRouche,[42] conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, [3][43][44] and politician Jesse Ventura , who made the Bilderberg group a topic of a 2009 episode of his TruTV series Conspiracy Theory with Jesse Ventura.[45] Non-American proponents include Lithuanian writer Daniel Estulin.[46
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilderberg_Meeting
They're real enough, what is ascribed to them is conspiracy theory nonsense.
How do you like the company you're in?


